Spider silk could be an ideal answer for helping heal wounds.
Researchers may have found a better alternative for providing skin grafts to wounds. It turns out that spider silk is legendary for its strength, as well as its possible healing properties. Tissue engineer Hanna Wendt at Medical School Hannover in Germany honed in on this and found that by creating an artificial skin spun from spider silk, we could have an ideal answer for helping heal wounds.
Growing Skin On Spider Silk
The findings were published in the July 26th issue of PLoS ONE. The authors write that reconstructive surgeons want a biomaterial that can promote the attachment, proliferation and growth of cells. Essentially, they want a bandaid that can make skin grow again. In looking for this solution, the researchers wove silk harvested from Golden Orb web spiders on steel frames. They found that human skin cells placed on the woven mesh and given the right warmth, air and nutrients will flourish within just a week’s time. They were able to harvest from the mesh two types of skin cells that resemble the epidermis (the outermost layer of skin) and the dermis (the next layer of skin under the epidermis).
The team concludes that their use of spider silk as a biomaterial for regrowing skin could be, quite literally, just what the doctor ordered.
A mesh layer of the spider silk could potentially be used instead of skin grafts on victims with burns, bed sores, and other wounds, creating an artificial skin that can be replaced with real human skin as cells regenerate.
Spider Silk As A Miracle Material
TechNewsDaily reports “Spider silk is the toughest known natural material. Moreover, there is abody of folklore dating back at least 2,000 years regarding the potential medical value of webs — for instance, in fighting infections, stemming bleeding, healing wounds and serving as artificial ligaments. The extraordinary strength and stretchiness of spider silk “are important factors for easy handling and transfer of many kinds of implants,” Wendt said. In addition, unlike silk from silkworms, that from spiders apparently does not trigger the body’s rejection reactions.”
Spider-centric Skin Not Quite A Practical Solution
While it seems to be a great solution, it is not practical on a commercial scale. Harvesting spider silk for this type of use would be too time consuming and expensive. The researchers figure that finding a synthetic alternative to the silk fibers from spiders would be more practical. However, we know that researchers have been searching for that holy grail for decades. It just goes to show that nature provides some miracle solutions that humans just can’t seem to duplicate.
Photo credit: I’ll Never Grow Up/Flickr
Via Treehugger